A pair of psychologists and an economist at the University of Turku, in Finland, have found that because the average electric vehicle (EV) owner is wealthier than the average person, they still have a bigger than average carbon footprint.
Read Also
- AWS CEO Matt Garman on generative AI, open source, and closing services
- Google’s Ask Photo feature is available for users that joined a waitlist
- Why is Mount Everest so big? New research highlights a rogue river—but deeper forces are at work
- Halo is officially getting a third-person view for the first time in its 20-year history
- You Asked: A/V gremlins, soundbar solutions, and best Prime Day buys
- Tony Fadell-backed Plumerai brings on-device AI to home security cameras
- Until Dawn movie director shares a promising, bloody update
- Astronomers detect multiple extended tidal tails in an old globular cluster
- The first Apple Intelligence features are expected to arrive on October 28
- New Radeon Developer Tool Suite expands testing capabilities with Driver Experiments
Latest phys
- Why is Mount Everest so big? New research highlights a rogue river—but deeper forces are at work
- Astronomers detect multiple extended tidal tails in an old globular cluster
- Study shows EV owners have bigger carbon footprint than average because they are wealthier
- Scientists map fruit fly brain to reveal neural circuit insights
- A 'forgotten' valley in storm-hit North Carolina, desperate for help
- Two elephants die in flash flooding in northern Thailand
- Trees' own beneficial microbiome could lead to discovery of new treatments to fight citrus greening disease
- Nuclear rockets could travel to Mars in half the time, but designing the reactors that would power them isn't easy
- Limestone and iron reveal puzzling extreme rain in Western Australia 100,000 years ago
- Study of global primate populations reveals predictors of extinction risk